2018-01-19 10:24 AM - last edited on 2023-05-23 04:12 PM by Rubia Torres
2018-01-19 11:09 AM
2018-01-22 02:09 AM
darwinland wrote:No, both elements will remain.
I d have a tricky question.
If you draw two identical objects, slabs, beam,..., does archicad understand that it is only one and discard the second object?
darwinland wrote:If you mean adding one slab to another with the pet palette command then you are not actually merging the slabs.
If that so, when you are adding two elementos that shares an edge, why do you have to erase the added element, i.e. for creating one big slab by adding two slabs adjoined slabs.
2018-01-22 08:31 AM
Barry wrote:darwinland wrote:No, both elements will remain.
I d have a tricky question.
If you draw two identical objects, slabs, beam,..., does archicad understand that it is only one and discard the second object?
Sometimes you won't notice and other times you may have trouble with connected elements.
There is an add-on (goodie) that you can download and install that can be used to check for duplicate elements.
Go to HELP menu > Archicad Downloads if you don't have it already.
Click on the "Add-ons' link and download the 'Goodies'.
darwinland wrote:If you mean adding one slab to another with the pet palette command then you are not actually merging the slabs.
If that so, when you are adding two elementos that shares an edge, why do you have to erase the added element, i.e. for creating one big slab by adding two slabs adjoined slabs.
You are just adding the area of one slab to the other, but it could just as easily be the additional area of a fill, or walls, or roof, etc.
It is just an area you are adding.
That is why you still need to manually delete the slab you are adding.
Thx, and to merge the slabs then...
Barry.
2018-01-22 08:42 AM